Saturday, January 11, 2014

Rain, Jan. 11, 2014

It is raining!!
Because we are about 20 inches behind in rainfall this time of year, we have started to feel nervous. So this morning's gentle rain is delightful!
Will we have enough water to irrigate the yard? Will we be able to grow vegetables? Will the farmers be able to grow food for the country?
The water levels have been so low that lakes are drying up.

They say that the next world war is going to be over Water resources.
Fracking is already contaminating ground water.
We may face water rationing.

Those are my Big Thoughts this morning and it shouldn't eclipse my delight over Noah's overnite here with his Dad. On the way up, his Dad asked: do you think we will eat out or Lola will cook? And Noah says: I hope Lola is cooking.

They left right after breakfast as he has baseball assessment today. He tells me has a new best friend - a Japanese boy who just moved here from Japan "to play baseball" but also to get away from Fukushima. Dad is white, mother is Japanese.

I went back to bed after they left. Pulled back the curtains to watch and listen to the rain.

About Me

I am the author of Coming Full Circle: The Process of Decolonization Among Post-1965 Filipino Americans; A Book of Her Own: Words and Images to Honor the Babaylan; and the editor of Babaylan: Filipinos and the Call of the Indigenous, as well as other journal publications, anthologies, and ezines.

I'm Project Director for the Center for Babaylan Studies, a nonprofit activity of the International Humanities Center (501C3). In 2010, we organized the First International Babaylan Conference at Sonoma State University. The Center's vision is to create a container for Babaylan-inspired events, collaborative projects, research projects, and other activities that disseminate knowledge and create community around the theme of Filipino Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Practices.